Bella and her husband Douglas held a Gaelic themed party in the woods just south of their small town in northeast Ohio on the Saturday night before Halloween every year.
They called it a Samhain festival, or just "Samhain." Douglas pronounced the name with more Irish brogue than he normally used which caused Bella to roll her eyes.
"Samhain" was a festival that celebrated the transition from the end of the growing season to the time of dark cold nights, a tradition carried from the old country and some said a tradition upon which Halloween came into existence in America.
Bella, and her friend Ellen did the brunt of the preparations for the gathering. Ellen's husband Carl, managed a commercial insurance branch office in downtown Cleveland, where Bella worked as well. The four of them had once been good friends but Carl's excessive drinking had broken their ties.
The festival was one of merriment with lots of beer and cider; fresh breads; including the soda and pumpernickel variety. Of course there were plenty of cheese and meat-pies kept warm in foil wrappers on a large grill fired by cherry wood.
Sometimes, it was reported, if the night wasn't too cold and the bonfires (there were two) were roaring, some of the women would remove their tops when the hour of silence came to an end.
The attendees often wore Celtic warrior costumes. The women spent much more time putting together their costumes. They wore high leather lace up boots, leather skirts, hooded wool sweaters and beaded leather masks. Everyone wore a mask. But some of the thirty or so usual attendees came dressed as werewolves or goats, animals in the tradition of Druids, and still a few others came as goblins or witches wearing more traditional Halloween costumes. It was a tradition to stay up until the witching hour before retiring for the night usually to small camping tents set up in the woods around the perimeter of the festival.
They played games. They bobbed for apples in a big tin tub. Each apple had a naughty dare attached: "ask for a kiss from a stranger tonight" or "find a wench who needs a good spanking," or "everyone here would like to see you warm your bare bottom by the bonfire."
Of course some ignored their dares and others volunteered to do dares that weren't theirs.
Ellen liked to hang sugar donuts on string from tree-limbs. The winner was the one who could eat a whole donut without a piece dropping to the ground.
Individual card games were played at small tables often with naughty results. A set of old fashioned stocks were often occupied by a wench or a goat who sometimes had her skirt raised or his britches lowered their bare bottom well spanked while a small crowd cheered them on. It was all harmless fun. A chance for hardworking people to step out of their lives and into costumes, personalities and voices they did not normally inhabit.
This year though, Ellen was troubled. She'd called Bella on the Thursday night before the festival. They had, in past years, always met the Friday morning before the festival for breakfast to go over all the festival arrangements.
Ellen said she didn't know if she could make it. It was Carl, she said. He'd been awful to her lately, drinking more and getting loud with her. "I don't know if I can go. I can't find my costume from last year. I mean, I think he burned it. He's getting meaner and I don't know what to do."
She spoke with a dismay in her voice.
Bella listened. "He has a problem."
"He has another intern. You probably have seen him with her."
"I have."
"He screamed at me last night that he has to fuck young college women because he can't stand my fat ass."
"He's an ass. And a predator." Bella shook her head.
She convinced Ellen to meet the next day and they met where they always met at Ziggys in Amherst. They sat in a solitary booth in the back of the small coffee shop on 1st Avenue.
Bella stirred her coffee with a cinnamon stick and listened to Ellen, whose face had dropped and faded as she spoke. She grew teary as she confessed, talking quietly, distraught, a wire of shame in her voice, often blaming herself as she had read women whose husbands who were unfaithful often did.
'I've been walking about as if I were in a daze. I hate myself Bella. I hate who I've become. I hate who I am married to."
"No, no need for that. It's not your fault." Bella said reassuringly. She'd heard this kind of talk from Ellen a lot more lately.
"I need my red mask, my costume, to hide my face. I'm sure he's thrown it out." Ellen said.
"We'll get a new one tonight. We can go to that shop in Lakewood. It'll be fun. A new outfit. Who will you be?"
Ellen grinned but didn't speak. They shared a mutual smirk. There was a long pause. A long silence.
Bella stared at her. "What?"
Ellen's lips quivered and she erupted with laughter, loudly, almost crazed, "You know what Bella. You know what? You know what I've fucking done while that asshole husband of mine is fucking another woman . I've lost 22lbs. Yep. 22lbs in three months and in all the right places." she said, still talking loudly with a buoyancy that sealed over what she'd been feeling before.
"You look great. It's not your fault." Bella said. "Come let's do this now. It's our little ritual."